contrast    between the powerful,   unyielding  hero,   whose   on-stage    body    is  the focus   of  the dramatic    action,
and the lesser  men who engage  in  a   dispute,    the techniques  of  which   were    familiar    to  Sophocles’  audience
from    the debates in  their   contemporary,   democratic  assembly.   Ajax    is, in  a   sense,  a   throwback   to  the
vanished    days    of  the heroic  past,   familiar    from    Homer’s epics.  Indeed, Ajax    bears   a   resemblance to
Homer’s Achilles:   Both    men are bitterly    enraged at  Agamemnon   because they    feel    slighted    by  their
commander;  both    men endanger    their   fellow  soldiers    as  a   result  of  their   rage;   and the death   of  both    men
arises  from    the sequence    of  events  set in  motion  by  their   furious response    to  Agamemnon’s slight.
Achilles’   death   does    not form    part    of  the action  of  the Iliad   (although   his imminent    death   is  hinted  at
repeatedly),    and Homer’s epic    poem    ends    with    Achilles    and Agamemnon   reconciled. Ajax,   on  the other
hand,   can never   be  reconciled  with    a   former  enemy,  and this    uncompromising  attitude    makes   him typical
of  Sophoclean  heroes, who are at  once    admirable   because of  their   steadfast   adherence   to  principle   and
unwelcome   members of  a   community   because of  their   total   self-reliance.  In  the case    of  Ajax,   this    self-
reliance    contributes significantly   to  his doom.   In  the course  of  the play,   it  is  revealed    that,   in  the past,
Ajax    had boasted that    he  was quite   capable of  winning glory   on  the battlefield without any assistance
from    the gods    and,    on  another occasion,   when    the goddess Athena  had stood   by  his side    and urged   him on,
Ajax    had told    her to  go  and stand   beside  some    lesser  warrior who might   be  in  greater need    of  her help.
This    was what    caused  Athena  to  madden  Ajax,   so  that    he  slaughtered livestock   instead of  attacking   his
enemies,    thereby incurring   humiliation beyond  bearing.
Sophocles   would   have    been    quite   capable of  treating    the tragedy of  Ajax    exclusively in  terms   of  Ajax’s
character,  without any recourse    to  the supernatural.   But the gods    are a   traditional feature of  Attic   drama,
which   is  performed   at  a   festival    in  honor   of  the god Dionysus.   The gods    occasionally    appear  as  characters
in  the drama,  and in  fact    Athena  appears briefly in  the opening scene   of  Sophocles’  Ajax.   In  another of
Sophocles’  tragedies,  the Electra,    the gods    are conspicuously   absent. Electra was produced    many    years
after   Ajax,   toward  the end of  Sophocles’  long    career. It  dramatizes  the same    events  that    formed  the plot    of
Aeschylus’  The Libation    Bearers,    namely  the return  of  Orestes from    exile,  his reunion with    his sister
Electra,    and his murder  of  Clytemestra and her lover.  But,    while   the main    character   of  Aeschylus’  play
was Agamemnon’s son Orestes,    Sophocles’  play    focuses,    as  its title   indicates,  on  Orestes’    sister.
Although    Electra is  a   woman   and therefore,  according   to  ancient Greek   thinking,   weaker  than    a   man and
less    capable of  independent action, she is  a   typical Sophoclean  hero    and has much    in  common  with
Sophocles’  Ajax.   She is  isolated    not only    by  circumstances   but by  deliberate  choice. It  has been    some
years   since   the murder  of  Agamemnon,  and Electra has incurred    the hatred  of  her mother  by  refusing    to
allow   Clytemestra to  forget  the heinous nature  of  her crime   in  murdering   her husband.    In  Aeschylus’
treatment   of  the story,  Clytemestra herself had sent    the child   Orestes away    at  the time    of  the murder, but in
Sophocles’  version it  is  Electra who saved   her younger brother by  sending him to  another city,   in  the
hopes   that    he  would   grow    up  to  avenge  their   father’s    death.  Electra now spends  her time    impatiently
awaiting    Orestes’    return, disappointed    that    he  apparently  does    not share   her decisiveness    and her
eagerness   for revenge.
“What   could   you possibly    have    been    relying upon    to  arm yourself    with    such    audacity    and invite  me
to  be  your    helper? Are you blind?  You’re  a   woman,  not a   man,    and your    strength    is  nothing compared
to  our enemies’.   Upon    them    fortune smiles  day after   day but on  us  she turns   her back    and leaves  us
cold.   How then    could   we  contrive    to  overpower   so  potent  a   foe and hope    to  escape  disaster?   Take
care    that    we  not make    a   bad situation   worse   if  someone so  much    as  hears   our words!” (Sophocles,
Electra 995–1004,   Chrysothemis    trying  to  restrain    Electra)